That is a joke.
Republican presidential (click here) hopeful Mitt Romney, who made his fortune as co-founder of a profitable hedge fund company, has personal financial assets worth as much as $260 million, according to disclosure documents. Read and search those documents here.
How many people did Romney put to work? How much housing did he ever build. Oh, wait, I nearly forgot Romney's expertise is in garage sales.
Donald Trump was never a hedge fund manager or a venture capitalist. Instead he built things. Building things is the furthest thing from Romney's ambitions. If anything, 2008 global economic collapse effected Trump's interests and I am sure it has been interesting growing it back again.
People housing was the last or should I say is the last real estate to recover. Business offices began to increase in value first after 2008. I am sure Mr. Trump has seen his fair share of foreclosures when it came to tenants. I think he'll probably have a very interesting perspective if he ever wants to comment on it.
But, Romney called Trump out on his income taxes? That is such a joke, Romney's business interests caused the 2008 global economic collapse. How is that offshoring going Mitt?
And right behind Mitt is loser number 2. The man who ignored and insulted President Obama to write his own national budget at a later date.
February 24, 2016
By Jennifer Steinhauser
Washington — Speaker Paul D. Ryan, (click here) chairman of the Republican National Convention, recent vice-presidential candidate and the highest elected Republican in the country, has one goal for this year: to form a conservative policy agenda for the Republican presidential nominee to embrace.
If that nominee is Donald J. Trump, that may be a waste of time.
Panicked Republicans question whether Mr. Trump will be able to unite a Republican-controlled Congress that would normally be expected to promote and promulgate his agenda, an internal crisis nearly unheard-of in a generation of American politics. On nearly every significant issue, Mr. Trump stands in opposition to Republican orthodoxy and his party’s policy prescriptions — the very ideas that Mr. Ryan has done more than anyone else to form, refine or promote over the last decade....
I can't wait for the first veto to be handed down and a signing statement that says, "Ryan, you're fired."
Republican presidential (click here) hopeful Mitt Romney, who made his fortune as co-founder of a profitable hedge fund company, has personal financial assets worth as much as $260 million, according to disclosure documents. Read and search those documents here.
How many people did Romney put to work? How much housing did he ever build. Oh, wait, I nearly forgot Romney's expertise is in garage sales.
Donald Trump was never a hedge fund manager or a venture capitalist. Instead he built things. Building things is the furthest thing from Romney's ambitions. If anything, 2008 global economic collapse effected Trump's interests and I am sure it has been interesting growing it back again.
People housing was the last or should I say is the last real estate to recover. Business offices began to increase in value first after 2008. I am sure Mr. Trump has seen his fair share of foreclosures when it came to tenants. I think he'll probably have a very interesting perspective if he ever wants to comment on it.
But, Romney called Trump out on his income taxes? That is such a joke, Romney's business interests caused the 2008 global economic collapse. How is that offshoring going Mitt?
And right behind Mitt is loser number 2. The man who ignored and insulted President Obama to write his own national budget at a later date.
February 24, 2016
By Jennifer Steinhauser
Washington — Speaker Paul D. Ryan, (click here) chairman of the Republican National Convention, recent vice-presidential candidate and the highest elected Republican in the country, has one goal for this year: to form a conservative policy agenda for the Republican presidential nominee to embrace.
If that nominee is Donald J. Trump, that may be a waste of time.
Panicked Republicans question whether Mr. Trump will be able to unite a Republican-controlled Congress that would normally be expected to promote and promulgate his agenda, an internal crisis nearly unheard-of in a generation of American politics. On nearly every significant issue, Mr. Trump stands in opposition to Republican orthodoxy and his party’s policy prescriptions — the very ideas that Mr. Ryan has done more than anyone else to form, refine or promote over the last decade....
I can't wait for the first veto to be handed down and a signing statement that says, "Ryan, you're fired."